Also of interest: MAC Cosmetics, which has donated more than $480 million to fight the global AIDS pandemic since 1994, is the official makeup partner for the Angles revival.

The play’s full title—Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes—hints at the sweeping nature of playwright Tony Kushner’s storytelling, which weaves together AIDS, Reaganism, religion, immigration, climate change, historical figures (Roy Cohn and Ethel Rosenberg), a closeted married Mormon who comes out to his mom, his pill-popping wife, a drag queen, a gay Black nurse, a gay couple and, yes, actual angels.

In related news, don’t miss Vox’s “How 2018 Reshaped Angels in America,” which explores how “the ghost of Trump is always next to Roy Cohn in the new production.” (In real life, Cohn, a closeted, homophobic lawyer living with HIV, was Trump’s mentor).

The relationship between Trump and Cohn (played by Nathan Lane in Angels) is further explored in New York magazine’s cover story this week, “The Original Donald Trump.” Penned by Frank Rich, it’s a deep dive into how “the New York Establishment will ignore unscrupulous acts to serve its interests—just look how it treated Roy Cohn, onetime lawyer to the president.”